Defining Your Mobility Management Strategy

Five Key Components

There are many issues to consider when creating an effective mobility management strategy. Employing a strategy that matches your company’s goals and culture will be crucial to insuring maximum efficiency with the resources your company has at its disposal. Selecting the right level of automation to compliment human capital investment can be challenging in the absence of clear strategic perspectives. Failure to find the right balance for your company’s identity can result in poor customer satisfaction, overspending and reactive versus proactive behavior. Like any deliberative choice, following some simple steps can result in a more successful outcome and better organizational options.

Key 1 – Evaluate Your Current and Desired Mobility Culture. Every organization has developed a culture around mobile devices. Some companies may be seeking to evolve that culture while others may be content with the status quo. In our prior tip, “Dimensions of a Mobility Management Strategy”, we outlined 10 dimensions to aid in assessing and determining where your company falls along a spectrum of possibilities that can impact strategy decisions. The end result of this assessment can be plotted via spider diagrams with each case revealing a different visual appearance. This Mobility MRI (Management Requirement Identity), as we call it, becomes the first step in formulating an appropriate investment and deployment strategy. The range of options goes from Employee Liable on one extreme to a Best-In-Class implementation at the other. There are many positions in between.

Employee Liable Best-In-Class

Because some mobile users will test the boundaries of mobile guidelines, it is important to establish an environment of management and control that can deliver the desired outcome. An Employee Liable approach, depending upon the level of stipend that may be offered to the employee, doesn’t necessarily deliver the most cost-effective approach but does deliver the minimum in-house management effort if that is your overriding objective. On the other end of the spectrum, Best-In-Class will require investing in the right level of automation and external resources but when done correctly can actually lead to the lowest overall mobility investment cost.

Key 2 – Determine Your Mobile Management Objectives. Every company is under the influence of fluctuations in the economy, company evolution and internal organizational changes and over time will go through a variety of short term priorities. There could be a short or long term focus on cost cutting influenced by business factors. These could include downsizing initiatives due to business cycles and may instigate a priority to employ a higher percentage of temporary workers or consultants. These can produce variations on mobility management priorities. It is imperative to synchronize mobility strategies with enterprise priorities.

There are many possibilities for an overarching management objective which is formed once you’ve established a clear view of your mobility culture. There will likely be a number of supporting objectives as well. Some candidates might be: lowering monthly recurring carrier costs; expanding end user help desk support; improving payment processing through automation; extending device acquisition support through an online, one-stop carrier agnostic provisioning portal; increasing the accuracy of cost allocations; setting security standards for protection of corporate content; or enhancing management oversight of usage and costs.

Key 3 – Assess Your Current Strengths and Weaknesses. Once you have a grasp of your current culture and overarching management objectives it will be important to assess your internal strengths and weaknesses in managing your current mobility environment. Through this candid assessment you will begin to identify where tools, automation, and even external expertise may be required to successfully deliver the desired results. Internal staffing may actually turn from weakness to strength with the welcome addition of the right tools and workflow automation.

Key 4 – Contemplate Financial Constraints. The cost of a mobility management program may ultimately be the most important concern. Because the cost models of mobile carriers are not at all suited for highly variable usage and these carrier models are constantly changing, managing a mobile program is not without its persistent challenges. An important part of a mobility strategy will be to identify the boundaries of cost that need to be applied when deploying a Mobility Management Service (MMS) or engaging third party resources. It will also be important to view the totality of costs including carrier services, internal headcount and outside tools and services rather than separating these into separate cost envelopes.

Key 5 – Establish Requirements and Implementation Steps. For many IT organizations, implementing change can be a challenge and requires management buy in and support. Executing a well-conceived mobility management strategy can generate tremendous financial and process efficiency payback. Even a small monthly decrease in cost can become a significant financial benefit when accumulated over an extended period of time. Predictable and accurate processes can yield significant benefit to an organization that is constantly on its heels due to understaffing. Defined processes that prevent re-hashing issues over and over again can relieve stress to those managing mobility and can result in a reduction of redundant and overlapping procedures.

Companies that can successfully define and execute the right balanced strategy matching corporate objectives, company culture, and financial constraints will turn headaches into predictable, controlled processes that can deliver unexpected financial returns as well as produce a more productive and satisfied user community.